The Winds and Flares of Proxima Centauri
B.J. Wargelin and J.J. Drake (Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory)
Abstract
With one or two exceptions,
existing measurements of stellar winds do not extend below a
few times
year--four
orders of magnitude higher than the solar mass loss rate--and
only apply to high-mass O and B stars, red giants, and supergiants.
In recent work we suggested that observation of
distinctively profiled X-ray halos arising from charge
transfer between highly-charged ions in stellar winds and neutral gas
in the surrounding interstellar medium can be used
to study the winds and astrospheres around nearby dwarf stars.
In the first application of this idea,
we have deduced an upper limit for the mass loss rate
of the nearby M dwarf Proxima Centauri based on two ACIS-S
observations totaling 58 ksec.
Using pulse height spectra, we have also obtained an estimate of Prox Cen's
coronal metallity and have examined some properties of a prominent flare
that occured during the observations.
CATEGORY: NORMAL STARS AND WHITE DWARFS